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Summaries and Short Reviews

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Shvoong Home>Arts & Humanities>History>Rites of Peace, The Fall of Napoloen and the Congress of Vienna Summary

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Rites of Peace, The Fall of Napoloen and the Congress of Vienna

Book Review by: HibernianScribe    

Original Author: Adam Zamoyski
In 1813 - 1814 as Napoleon''s empire collapsed national boundaries were redrawn. Hundreds of German kingdoms, Italy''s papal
states, Norway, Denmark, the Austrian Netherlands (present day Belgium), Spain and France''s overseas colonies and Poland were the focus of speculation. Napoleon returned to Paris in December 1812 following his defeat in Russia, the three subsequent years are discussed in detail in Zamoyski''s book. The foreign ministers of Britain (Castlereagh), Austria (Metternich) and France (Talleyrand) were driven to despair by the protracted  negotiations.  Vienna  from 1814 to 1815  hosted  the cutting of the King''s Cake, the subject of a contemporary French cartoon. Vienna was interrupted by the terrors of Napoleon''s Hundred Days, Napoleon escaped from Elba and returned to Paris in March 1815 , folowing the Battle of Waterloo (which he nearly won), June 1815,  Napoleon  was banished to St Helena.Henry Kissinger said the  Congress of Vienna brought a century of peace to Europe. Zamoyski says  it ignored  the rights of minorities and  small nations. Germans did not  secure their separate state; Italy remained fragmented, ruled by foreigners; Poland was denied freedom. Vienna prolonged monarchical governments and legalised previous social hierarchies, directly leading to the wars  of the 19th century. Peacemaking is as important as waging war but proves more tedious to comprehend.
Published: April 27, 2007
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